Abstract

There is controversy over the efficacy of aldose reductase inhibitors in preventing the development of peripheral nerve lesions in experimental diabetes. This study was designed to show whether long-term (28-wk) inhibition of aldose reductase by ponalrestat influences structural changes in peripheral sensory nerve in rats with chronic streptozocin-induced diabetes. Sciatic nerve levels of sorbitol and fructose were significantly reduced but not completely normalized by ponalrestat treatment. myo-Inositol levels, which tended to decrease in diabetic rats, were significantly increased by ponalrestat treatment and exceeded the level in nondiabetic control rats (P less than 0.01). Ponalrestat treatment significantly increased nerve conduction velocity over the 28 wk of treatment (P less than 0.05), but levels remained well below those of control rats. Structural analysis of sural nerve of diabetic rats disclosed significant preventive effects of ponalrestat on the reduction in myelinated nerve fiber size and fiber occupancy. Axon-fiber size ratio was also preserved in the ponalrestat-treated group. However, diffuse deposition of glycogen and increased glycogenosomes within axons were not influenced by ponalrestat treatment. In contrast to the effect on myelinated nerve fibers, morphometry of unmyelinated nerve fibers did not reveal a significant effect of ponalrestat treatment. These results suggest that chronic treatment with an aldose reductase inhibitor has beneficial effects on the peripheral sensory nerve of experimentally diabetic rats. The effects were primarily on myelinated rather than unmyelinated nerve fibers.

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